Case Summary (G.R. No. 182926)
Factual Background
DKT Philippines filed a Complaint‑Affidavit alleging that on October 2, 2003 petitioner altered Commercial Receipt No. 6729 issued by Garden Cafe, Jagna, Bohol, changing the amount from P810.00 to P1,810.00, and thereafter used the altered receipt to claim reimbursement, receiving P1,810.00. The incident gave rise to Criminal Case No. 2904 (falsification of a private document) and related civil and administrative complaints noted in the record.
Criminal Information and Essential Elements Alleged
The Information charged that on or about October 2, 2003 in Jagna, Bohol, petitioner willfully and feloniously falsified a commercial receipt by altering P810.00 to P1,810.00 and used the receipt to claim reimbursement from DKT Philippines, causing damage or intending to cause damage, contrary to Article 172(2) in relation to Article 171 of the Revised Penal Code.
Motion to Quash and Initial MCTC Rulings
Petitioner filed a Motion to Quash and to Defer Arraignment (arguing improper venue and lack of essential elements committed in Jagna). The MCTC denied the motion in an Order dated November 2, 2005 and set the case for arraignment; a motion for reconsideration was denied by resolution on January 24, 2006.
Petition for Certiorari to the RTC and RTC Ruling
Petitioner sought certiorari relief from the RTC, alleging grave abuse of discretion by the MCTC in denying the motion to quash. The RTC denied the petition on September 21, 2006, concluding that probable cause and venue had been adequately resolved by the Regional State Prosecutor based on sworn statements (notably that of a cashier who recounted petitioner borrowing her pen and writing on the receipt in the cashier’s presence), and that the Information and complaint‑affidavit sufficiently alleged commission of the falsification in Jagna.
Court of Appeals Proceedings
The Court of Appeals dismissed petitioner’s appeal and affirmed the RTC in a Decision dated August 28, 2007; a motion for reconsideration was denied in a May 7, 2008 Resolution. Petitioner then filed a Rule 45 petition to the Supreme Court.
Issues Presented to the Supreme Court
Petitioner raised three principal issues: (1) MCTC Jagna lacked jurisdiction because none of the essential elements of falsification occurred in Jagna; (2) the filing of a certiorari petition to challenge the denial of the motion to quash was procedurally proper; and (3) settled law permits certiorari to question denial of a motion to quash under circumstances of grave abuse or lack of jurisdiction.
Legal Standard on Venue and Jurisdiction in Criminal Cases
The Court reiterated that venue is an essential element of criminal jurisdiction: an action must be instituted where the offense was committed or where any of its essential ingredients occurred (Section 15[a], Rule 110; Section 10, Rule 110). For falsification of private documents, venue is the place where the document was actually falsified, irrespective of whether the falsified document was later used elsewhere.
Application of Jurisdictional Rules to Pleadings
Relying on the principle that jurisdiction is determined by the allegations in the complaint or information (and not by proof at the preliminary stage), the Court found a prima facie showing that the falsification occurred in Jagna. The Information and Complaint‑Affidavit directly alleged alteration of a Garden Cafe receipt in Jagna, and the prosecutor’s investigation produced sworn statements supporting the inference that the receipt was altered in the cashier’s presence in Jagna.
Probable Cause Standard vs. Rules of Evidence
The Court emphasized that the threshold for filing an information is probable cause, which requires facts sufficient to engender a well‑founded belief that a crime was committed and the accused is probably guilty; it does not demand proof beyond reasonable doubt or strict compliance with evidentiary exclusionary rules. Accordingly, the use of a cashier’s sworn statement by the prosecutor in determining probable cause did not contravene Section 34, Rule 130 (the rule limiting use of evidence of similar acts) in the context of venue and probable cause determination.
Damage Element and Intent under Article 172(2)
Addressing petitioner’s argument that damage was not present at time of issuance, the Court held that Article 172(2) criminalizes falsification committed “to the damage of a third party, or with the intent to cause such damage,” and that intent to cause damage suffices to satisfy the statutory element at the pleading stage.
Limitations on Supreme Court Review Under Rule 45
The Court observed that a Rule 45 petition raises only questions of law; factual disputes as to where the crime occurred are generally not reviewable absent exceptional circumstances. The Court enumerated recognized exceptions permitting factual review (e.g., findings grounded on conjecture, manifestly mistaken inferences, grave abuse, conflict of facts, findings contrary to admissions, etc.) and found petitioner failed to demonstrate any such exception.
Multiplicity of Prosecutions and Change of Venue A
...continue readingCase Syllabus (G.R. No. 182926)
Case Caption, Citation, and Ponencia
- Supreme Court decision reported at 761 Phil. 142, Third Division, G.R. No. 182926, dated June 22, 2015; original received July 8, 2015.
- Opinion penned by Justice Peralta; decision denouncing and affirming lower courts’ rulings. Velasco, Jr. (Chairperson), Villarama, Jr., Reyes, and Jardeleza, JJ., concur.
- Appeal seeks review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court from the Court of Appeals Decision dated August 28, 2007 and Resolution dated May 7, 2008 (CA-G.R. SP No. 02353), which affirmed the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Loay, Bohol, Branch 50 Order dated September 21, 2006 in SP Civil Action No. 0356.
Parties and Representation
- Petitioner: Ana Lou B. Navaja.
- Private respondent/complainant: DKT Philippines, Inc., represented by Atty. Edgar Borje.
- Judicial respondent named: Hon. Manuel A. De Castro, acting presiding judge of MCTC Jagna-Garcia-Hernandez, Bohol.
- Criminal case before the Municipal Circuit Trial Court (MCTC) of Jagna-Garcia-Hernandez docketed as Criminal Case No. 2904.
Factual Background and Core Allegations
- Private respondent DKT Philippines, Inc. filed a Complaint-Affidavit alleging that while petitioner was its Regional Sales Manager she falsified a commercial receipt.
- Specific allegation: petitioner altered Garden Cafe commercial receipt No. 6729, issued in Garden Cafe, Jagna, Bohol on October 2, 2003, changing the amount from EIGHT HUNDRED TEN PESOS (P810.00) to ONE THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED TEN PESOS (P1,810.00), then used that receipt to claim reimbursement from DKT and received P1,810.00 to her own benefit.
- Complaint-affidavit and annexes included: (a) photocopy of the receipt dated October 2, 2003 sent to DKT Metro Manila; (b) field investigation finding that the actual amount incurred at Garden’s Cafe was P810.00 and a certified true duplicate original official receipt (pink copy) from Garden’s Cafe, Jagna.
- Chronology relevant to venue and factual dispute: receipt date October 2, 2003 (Jagna, Bohol); Weekly Travel Expense Report for September 29–October 4, 2003 prepared and submitted on October 6, 2003 in Cebu City (point relied upon by petitioner to argue impossibility of falsification in Jagna).
- Sworn statement of cashier Cherly/Cherrel B. Labarro/Lavarro (as referenced): cashier narrated that after issuance of the receipt to petitioner, petitioner borrowed the cashier’s pen and in the cashier’s presence wrote something on the receipt; cashier’s affidavit corroborated by another witness who stated petitioner was in Jagna when the questioned receipt was issued.
- Other factual context: petitioner faced separate falsification complaints allegedly filed in different jurisdictions (Cebu City, Bacolod City, Iloilo City, Tagbilaran, Bohol); amounts in other falsification complaints cited as P3,600.00, P2,000.00, P2,000.00 and P1,000.00, respectively.
Criminal Information (Accusatory Portion)
- Information dated February 10, 2005 (for Jagna, Bohol) charged petitioner with falsification of a private document under Article 172, No. 2, in relation to Article 171, No. 6 of the Revised Penal Code.
- Accusatory allegations expressly recited place and date: "That on or about the 2nd day of October 2003, in the municipality of Jagna, province of Bohol, Philippines and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court... did... falsify a commercial receipt No. 6729 of Garden Cafe, Jagna, Bohol... from P810.00 to P1,810.00 and thereafter used the said receipt to claim reimbursement with DKT Philippines, Inc. ... received the amount of P1,810.00 to her own benefit; to the damage and prejudice of the offended party in the amount to be proved during trial."
Procedural History (Chronology of Proceedings)
- February 18, 2004: Complaint-Affidavit by DKT filed (annexes included).
- Criminal Information filed in MCTC Jagna (Criminal Case No. 2904).
- August 1, 2005: Petitioner filed Motion to Quash and Defer Arraignment, asserting lack of jurisdiction/improper venue because essential elements of falsification did not occur in Jagna.
- November 2, 2005: MCTC denied motion to quash and set case for arraignment (order noted petitioner had submitted to court jurisdiction by posting cash bond); prior arraignment date set aside.
- January 24, 2006: MCTC denied motion for reconsideration of November 2, 2005 Order (Resolution).
- Petitioner filed petition for certiorari with RTC challenging MCTC interlocutory orders for grave abuse of discretion.
- September 21, 2006: RTC issued Order denying the petition for certiorari for lack of legal basis or merit.
- Appeal to Court of Appeals; August 28, 2007: CA Decision dismissed petitioner’s appeal and affirmed RTC order.
- May 7, 2008: CA denied petitioner’s motion for reconsideration (Resolution).
- Petitioner filed Rule 45 petition for review on certiorari to the Supreme Court.
- June 22, 2015: Supreme Court rendered Decision denying the petition and affirming CA Decision and Resolution.
Issues Properly Raised in the Supreme Court Petition
- Main issues presented by petitioner in Rule 45 petition:
- I. Whether the MCTC of Jagna, Bohol has jurisdiction over the criminal case because none of the essential elements of falsification of a private document occurred in Jagna.
- i. Allegation that no essential elements occurred in Jagna, Bohol.
- ii. Venue in criminal cases is jurisdictional and cannot be presumed from acts on a different time and occasion.
- iii. Venue rules protect accused from harassment; must be strictly applied.
- II. Whether petitioner properly availed of remedy of filing a petition for certiorari to question improper venue in the instant case.
- III. Whether settled law permits filing of a petition for certiorari to question denial of a motion to quash.
- I. Whether the MCTC of Jagna, Bohol has jurisdiction over the criminal case because none of the essential elements of falsification of a private document occurred in Jagna.
Legal Principles and Authorities Relied Upon by the Court
- Fundamental rules on venue and jurisdiction:
- Venue in criminal cases is an essential element of jurisdiction; court must have territorial jurisdiction where offense or any essential ingredient occurred (citing Foz, Jr. v. People).
- Section 15(a), Rule 110, 2000 Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure: criminal action instituted and tried where the offense was committed or where any of its essential ingredients occurred.
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